"Really The Blues" is the story of a white kid who fell in love with black culture, learning to blow clarinet in the reform schools, brothels and honky-tonks of his youth. Drawn by the revelation of the blues, he followed the music along the jazz avenues of Chicago, New Orleans, and New York, and into the heart of America's soul. Told in the jive lingo of the underground's inner circle, this classic is an unforgettable chronicle of street life, smoky clubs, roadhouse dances, and reefer culture.First published in 1946, Really the Blues was a rousing wake-up call to alienated young whites to explore black culture and the world of jazz, the first music America could call its own. Their spiritual godfather was Mezzrow, jazz cat, bootlegger, and peddler of the finest gauge in Harlem. Above all, Mezz championed the abandon available to those willing to lose their blues.Citadel Underground's edition of Really the Blues features a new introduction by Barry Gifford, author of the novel Wild at Heart and co-author of Jack's Book: An Oral Biography of Jack's Kerouac."Really the Blues, read at the counter of the counter of the Columbia U Bookstore in mid-forties, was for me the first signal into white culture of the underground black, hip culture that preexisted before ny own generation." -- Allen Ginsberg"Milton Mezzrow was, is and shall always be the single most important figure in the history of marijuana in America. Like Leary, the Mezz turned on a new generation to a new drug...Mezzrow was 1) the first white Negro, 2) the Johnny Apleseed of weed, 3) the author of a great American autobiography, Really the Blues, the finest eyewitness account of American countercultureeverpublished. The book is, likewise, the master-piece of the counterculture's most characteristics literary medium: the slang-laced, jazz-enrhythmed, long-breathed and rhapsodic street rap and rave-up." -- Albert Goldman"Really the Blues appeared at a fundamental moment in American history, wh
Industry Reviews
"American counter-culture classic Really the Blues [is] a stylized oral history that anticipates the Beat novel...Really the Blues is part quixotic adventure novel, part inside-scoop...Mezzrow's voice is funny, impulsive, full of itself and often spectacularly scatological....Listening to "Mezz" is tremendous fun...the book's true literary inheritance is its style...one of the great, flawed, jubilant, jive-talking characters of American literature." --Martin Riker, The Wall Street Journal "The mighty Mezz was at once the greatest digger, the greatest chronicler, the greatest celebrator of [jazz] culture, as well as being a principal actor on its main stage and contributor of its most characteristic fragrance--the pungent aroma of burning bush." --Albert Goldman, High Times
"Mezz Mezzrow's rambunctious enthusiasm for jazz and the world it shaped and defined keeps the pages turning...The lost world of the Jazz Age comes alive in these pages, replete with all the Chi-town bounce and streetwise braggadocio that came with the risqu� territory...Mezzrow's love of the music and the 'bandid' lifestyle is palpable and infectious, giving his story a novelistic verve. In many ways, Mezz is the Augie March of jazz." --Matt Hanson, The Arts Fuse
"As to the books of Bernard Wolfe, his extraordinary imagination, his range of styles and genres, should alone qualify him for a conspicuous role in 20th-century American literature." --Thomas Berger
"Really the Blues returns us...to the roots of rock, to the roots certainly of beat and hence to the beginnings of the sixties counterculture through an extended look into the life of a Jewish boy...who turned his back on the middle class and all it had to offer to blow jazz in 'more creep joints and speakeasies and dancehalls than the law allows.' "--Brooke Horvath, Review of Contemporary Fiction
"An intense, sincere and honest book. It makes all the novels with jazz backgrounds seem as phony as an Eddie Condon concert."--Bucklin Moon, The New Republic
"An autobiography such as was never seen before beneath the moon."--Ben Ray Redman, The American Mercury